Memoir (1)

Oct. 11th, 2008 10:29 am
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Oh, sure, plenty of things evoke a deeper sense of shame than seeing yourself as an utter and complete financial failure. Say you're a pedophile who’s successfully eluded the authorities for the past twenty years. Then one day the police bust down your door and find you entertaining the entire population of Little Rainbow Daycare, making shadow puppets with your dick. That’s gotta hurt! Or maybe your father is at home dying a slow and painful death from an extremely lethal variety of cancer and you swig down his morphine. I imagine you'd be very ashamed of yourself. When you finally came down.

But I'm not a child molester or a drug addict. I'm just a deadbeat. Which is to say I'm a fuck-up but a harmless fuck-up. Not a bad person. A good person! I let frantic drivers cut in front of me even when I have the right of way. I bring a plastic baggie and use it when I walk my dogs. I pick random trash up from the sidewalks – it doesn't matter that I didn't drop it, we're all in this together, right? When I was making in excess of $125,000 a year – not so very long ago – I donated $250 every month to a worthy cause. I'd dump all the non-profit entreaties that made their way into my mailbox into a pillow case and pick one at random. Secular tithing, I called it. The random element was important.

But Ashley from Monterey County Bank didn't know any of these things. And she'd called me again this morning.

I’d gotten into the habit of keeping my cell phone off at all times so I never actually have to talk to Ashley from Monterey County bank: it's so much less humiliating just to listen to the polite messages she leaves me. Never a hint of judgment, censure, ridicule or exasperation in Ashley’s voice. Ashley is a banking professional!

Ashley doesn't state the reason for her call in the voicemails she leaves, but then Ashley doesn't have to.

I know.

It’s another bounced check.

"This is a message for Patrizia from Ashley at Monterey County Bank. It's 9:30am on April the 11th. Please call me at …"

Ashley, Ashley, Ashley. By now don't you think I know your number by heart?

My rent check had bounced.

All morning long I’d been crouched in front of my computer in my little cubicle at Service Check Inc., one Firefox window open to customer service reports, another open to my bank statement. I refreshed the bank statement every five minutes so I wouldn’t be logged off.

Editing Mystery Shopping was my Number 2 job, and it was often quite diverting.

What’s Mystery Shopping? I didn’t know either till I got this gig.

Mystery Shopping is the means by which large corporations with a service component (think McDonald’s, think Target) get to spy on the meanest and humblest of their employees. That cashier surreptitiously picking his nose while ringing up your gym socks? Don’t worry, sooner or later we’re gonna bust him for it.

Armed with twenty-point assessment guides, mystery shoppers go forth to review the customer service they receive at any one of Service Check’s hundred or so clients. It’s a great scam. People are dying to sign up to be Mystery Shoppers because they’re under the impression that they’re getting something for nothing. See, they’re reimbursed for whatever they buy when they’re mystery shopping and sometimes they make as much as seven whole dollars per shop! Never mind that they didn't actually need a new umbrella or a spandex jump suit; never mind that they didn't like to eat chicken tortilla rolls or peanut coleslaw. Never mind that frequently they spent much more than seven bucks driving to and from the location. The important thing was that they were getting paid to shop!

They draft their impressions in the form of reports. The reports consist of a long, rambling questionnaire and a narrative. After the shopper spends an hour or so filling that out, they have to write a narrative about their customer service experience. That’s where I came in. I read these narratives, correct spelling and grammar, try to turn them into something that will withstand scrutiny when summarized into a PowerPoint presentation at a big corporate meeting. Hard work! Because mostly Mystery Shoppers are illiterate, and when they’re not illiterate, they either think they’re Ruth Reichl or Anthony Trollope.

He efficiently served us politely…

She did not have any enthusiasm in her voice but she was pleasant in her deliverance…

For the amount of watermelons stacked at the store I can say was the largest on inventory at that time but they were laid at the ground. I don't notice the existence of any rodent traps…

My assessment of this location gives it an "excellent" in the cleanliness of the establishment, the positive and helpful attitude exhibited by the personnel, and the low-key but enthusiastic salesmanship, encouraging patrons to purchase additional items…

Time to check the bank screen.

When last I’d checked a few minutes before, my account had held $1609.47. A rent check I’d mailed to my landlord five day ago had been made out in the amount of $1950. But surely my landlord wouldn’t deposit it today. Surely my landlord would wait until Monday to deposit it and by Monday I would have the weekend receipts from my main source of income, The Little Store, to cover the deficit.

Writing checks against future receivables. Never a good thing. But what else could I do? My landlord had called me. On the other end of the telephonic ether, I had flushed and squirmed. Made promises I desperately hoped I could keep.

I refreshed the bank screen.

Overdrawn. By three hundred sixty-five dollars and fifty-three cents. That extra twenty-five bucks was the Monterey County Bank’s Non-Sufficient Funds charge.

I felt like throwing up.

In the cubicle next to mine, Katrinka, the blonde and Juno-esque Client Manager, was attempting to entice a mystery shopper into visiting a restaurant that specialized in meatballs and breadsticks. “Well you don’t actually have to eat the whole breadstick,”
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The Quest For Tribal Identity took me face-to-face with the worst gefilte fish I have ever seen, smelled or tasted last night. Truly. It looked like cat turds on a plate (artfully arranged on leaves of iceberg lettuce) and tasted like something a pelican might regurgitate to feed its teratogenically altered spawn. I was at a Seder table with the Dorothy-Parker-bobbed Jean, her traveling trio of doctors, long-suffering Ben and my preternaturally beautiful Robin whose eyelashes seem to grow another half inch every day and who crossed himself at random intervals during the Haggadah reading.

The traveling trio of doctors continues to intrigue me. At least one of them is married to Jean, but all three seem to live with her. When I first met them, I thought they were all gay but now I think they may all be cancer survivors. Don, closest to me at the table, kept making wistful references to Gourmet magazine as he explored the gefilte fish with the prongs of his fork. "Are you Jewish?" I asked.

"Oh, God no. Any religion that uses Manishevitz as a sacrament is not for me. I'm an Episcopalian."

"I'm Jewish," said David across the table. David kind of looks like W.H. Auden in a badly fitting blond wig. "Some people grow up thinking they're women trapped in a man's body. I grew up thinking I was a Jew trapped in a WASP. I converted years ago."

Are you serious? I thought but did not like to ask, and shortly thereafter the conversation evolved into Seder songs as interpreted by the Grammy winners of yesteryear. David did Eminem, Don did Barbra Steisand, I did Barry White. Peter beamed at us like Buddha and Robin squirmed under his yamaka: "When can I take the beanie off?" Mildly entertaining.

At the end of the evening Jean slipped me her phone number. "Let's get together." And I was very pleased. One of the truly awful things about middle age is that there seems to be an assumption that you've maxxed out your friend quota, that you hardly have time to keep up with the friends you already have let alone make new ones. Whereas I am always cruising for new people to conscript into the inner circle, and I'm self-conscious about that, as if it makes me somehow less of a grown-up.

Aside from the Seder, it was a frustrating day. After a week of business meetings and crunching and recrunching cash flow analyses and break even points, I let my right brain out of its cage yesterday and sat down to write the gruesome Yeltsa slaughter scene. It was gruesome all right, I even succeeded in creeping myself out but it reads more like splatterpunk than noir. And then there are all the structural anxieties – Yeltsa's murder has to be written from Yeltsa's point of view. But that means there are now three POV characters – one of whom (Yeltsa) only lasts a single scene – and since at some point, I want to add Ridenour, the alcoholic art historian, into the mix, my aesthetic sensibilities are blasting red alerts. Ah well. It's only a first draft.

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